Hurley Building Redevelopment | 19 Staniford St | West End

This is one of the few brutalist buildings that I really like (the other being the Yale architecture building).

I completely get both sides of the argument as the current unmaintained (chain-linked fence?, for gosh sake) super block is doing nothing for urbanism. But I do love its architecture (an undefined and loaded word).

If it goes I will be sad for its loss, but would look forward to something dramatic and engaging replacing it.

Most of all I would be sad to lose the frog face

To be clear, the Frog Face isn't going anywhere. This is ONLY the Hurley side of the building, not the Lindemann. For those unsure, I've pulled this highly official image highlighting what is slated for redevelopment:

Hurley Building Redevelopment.JPG
 
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My prediction: the status quo will remain for the foreseeable future, until the full build-out of the garage complex and the demand to use the building as a profitable venture is actually being funded (privately). Otherwise it's not going anywhere, just like the North/South Station connector.

Really? I see a long wait coming (a la Government Center Garage) but I think developers will fall on this like vultures on carrion. GSA had no trouble selling Volpe, and that included very specific requirements for a replacement facility, as opposed to the vague ones here.

Volpe and Winthrop Square demonstrate that when government (Feds and City in the those cases) make offers like this, developers respond.
 
This thread is the existential angst this forum needed. I'm loving reading through all of this.

Agreed. I'm having one myself. I really like this building. That said, it's flat out bad urbanism and there's no denying that. I'm glad the Lindemann isn't going anywhere. It's the most architecturally significant portion of the complex in my opinion and I think it stands well on its own. I like the opportunity to break up the block a bit and better utilize the space (it's a huge footprint for ~650 people to occupy 8hrs/day 5 days/week). I'm hopeful that any proposal will creatively utilize the existing structure (or a significant part of it). There's room along Staniford and Cambridge to build out retail storefronts (minimalist/glass preferably - something that plays well with the existing concrete), and there's room along New Chardon and in the place to add the bulk of the projects square footage in tower form while preserving as much of the existing structure as possible.

Volpe and Winthrop Square demonstrate that when government (Feds and City in the those cases) make offers like this, developers respond.

Barring an economic collapse between now and groundbreaking, I agree with you. Seeing as the state wants to retain office space at this location, it's likely that the developer will have some risk mitigation that might not exist in a purely private development.
 
This thread is a perfect example of just how useless this site has become. This is an architectural gem and you jabronies are salivating over replacing it with the tallest glass box you can come up with. There used to be discourse on here about architecture, now it's just a bunch of Dubai fan boys.

If they seriously propose tearing this down I might have to move back to Boston and start a campaign to save it.

Eh, we've had lots of discussions about this. Yes, it is an interesting building from a pure design point of view, maybe even an important building. But it fails miserably on street level engagement. There is more to urban form than architecture alone. This building is massively disruptive to the urban fabric and should not be there.
 
I don't think that's true. What I am hearing is mostly a lot of people who just don't like this building, but who are mixing arguments and saying that it's the bad effect on urban planning/experience that's the real reason this needs to go.
Some people may hate the building in the abstract. I'm not among that group. I think it's a very interesting building. I come at this as a fan of brutalism, so the building itself works for me. But I simply cannot abide by what it does to the city. Hence my happiness at the idea it may soon be gone. Also, since the plan involves keeping the Lindemann, we will still have some compelling brutalist architecture in this space, it simply will no longer overwhelm such a large swath of downtown.
 
Rather than destroying it, they should be calling Bruner/Cott or designLAB in to add some glass and do a strategic reworking of the ground level spaces ala BU Law Tower (Sert) or UMD Carney Library (Rudolph) to enhance the characteristics of the brutalism, rather than erase them. There ARE ways to make brutalism work in 2019 that celebrate the original form.

Ultimately, we'll still have the Lindemann portion, so we get to keep and appreciate some of it.

Also, DOCOMOMO is going to raise HELL. The Hurley is not going to go down without a long, drawn out fight with the modernism preservationist groups.
 
This thread is a perfect example of just how useless this site has become. This is an architectural gem and you jabronies are salivating over replacing it with the tallest glass box you can come up with. There used to be discourse on here about architecture, now it's just a bunch of Dubai fan boys.

If they seriously propose tearing this down I might have to move back to Boston and start a campaign to save it.

the fate of the "architectural jem" has been written.

archjem.jpg
 
If it isn't City Hall it's this one the knives are always out for. Simply put it's been a greatly misunderstood and highly abused masterpiece, from the beginning when the tower was cancelled, through all the decades of poor maintenance and neglect, to the really insulting parking lot the back has become. The city at some point decided Hurley (and Lindemann) were disposable and gave up on them. That kind of willful disinvestment will blight any building.
The outline of the proposal to reinvent and save it has great potential. It stresses an opening up for better circulation and that the ground floor and front plaza need to seriously interact with the street. And a significant residential tower (in place of the useless park in back?) is crucial. It can be done, the reno of the Carney library at UMass Dartmouth is excellent proof of that. https://www.architectmagazine.com/project-gallery/claire-t-carney-library_o
Brad -- you over reached

The Lindemann is not going to be torn down as in the announcement it is "architecturally more significant"
$200M to fix the Hurley building*1 and not even make it very useful [designed for a very different era] is very very very poor use of taxpayer's money

*1 estimate of cost to repair [leaks] and update to 21st C office standards [e.g. energy utilization, ADA compliance, etc.]
 
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I really want to emphasize that I don't think this building is perfect. But calling for outright destruction is the most mob spun ignorance I can imagine. If you can't walk around this complex and see the wonderful details, details that can only be experienced as a pedestrian mind you, then I don't understand how you can love a city as rich as Boston. There are so many small spaces, open to the public, that could be enhanced to bring people into the building rather than cut them off from the city. I always thought it would be great for a hotel lobby, encased in some glass exostrucutre. The fact that so many on here only care about height and development for the sake of development has always been annoying but now it's insulting.

Speaking to the entire complex,
Some may call for this crazy, perverse sand castle to be saved. As hard it may be for good people to accept, this absurd mass of concrete is one of the greatest urban blights in USA. However, there's more to ridding ourselves of it (for the greater good) than just bringing an end to blight.
It's not hard to see once you weigh it's jovial, cynical, quasi-historic value vs the site's unrealized potential.... If the building is allowed to survive, a vital part of Downtown, already confined with a critical lack of space will continue to be under-utilized and fail to become an iconic address in Boston. Not only is the footprint of the building one of the last straightforward, realistic sites for one or more future skyscrapers. But, it is worthy to become the next Cobb/Pei or Piano type masterpiece.
One of the reasons why i admire the work of Don Chiofaro and Joe Larkin, is they recognize that when a site is well suited, or particularly merits having an iconic building put on it, it shouldn't be developed with 2/3 of an iconic building on it--but rather, get the full building. In particular for Chiofaro, there's more to it than just putting up a highrise and making a profit. Chiofaro risks it all: money, reputation and more to create something that will be tall, and have permanence. With Millennium, maybe the pursuit of profit pushes their form to follow function. Well enough: Good urbanism prevails! It should happen more often in an iconic City (such that Boston is). We got the Pru/which along with the Seagram Bldg (375 Park Ave/NYC) very likely, are the best modernist towers of the late 50's to the 70's. Thank God.
In New York, they could screw up massively (Pan Am/Met Life), years later, put some PoMo garbage, and decades later keep doing better on the next generation of towers.
There aren't those same opportunities in Boston – including right here with the Hurley + Lindemann Mental Health Bldg/s. It ALL needs to go – and we need to get it right, not just by what reaches skyward, but by considering that other sites could be integrated into a far better foot path/walk-able street grid (after this site is developed).
Boston can live without these buildings a lot better than it can live (with) it all still standing. Everyone knows it never should have been built. The argument for Brutalism as a worthy architectural endeavor can probably be made: we've seen plenty of examples. But not even in Pyongyang, should something as absurd, and dehumanizing as this vastly huge building, with its extended prison walls–exist. It sure as hell shouldn't exist in Downtown Boston, closing off 3 neighborhoods from each other, in a precious, historic, walk-able zone.

That said, i've saved the best reason, and if i may, with boldface, garish aplomb.

The Monolith rails at the former residents of the West End in perpetuity, and that fact alone makes it a particularly expensive exercise in Brutalist adventurism and urban malfeasance. People who support its continued existence, or any type of similar tribute building should pick their battles and sell Brutalist preservation someplace else. Here, they're selling 'crazy.' The wrecking balls won't come soon enough.
 
To be clear, the Frog Face isn't going anywhere. This is ONLY the Hurley side of the building, not the Lindemann. For those unsure, I've pulled this highly official image highlighting what is slated for redevelopment:

View attachment 1003

That's good news. I love the look of that part of the complex.

For anyone who has been in these buildings, how is that they are considered separate buildings? They seem contiguous on ground-level (the white/black demarcation on the aerial is eye-opening). Were they built at different times?

I certainly hope the money raised will go to reviving the Lindemann in some way. Abstract curves like the following have been one of my favorite parts of looking at the building but I have always felt less invited to stroll around in recent years with the chain-link.

1572540820303.png
 
The entire embarrassment to architecture is all coming down, frog face and all.
Just not anytime soon, unfortunately.
Sadly, very likely not in my lifetime,
and tragically, possibly not in the lifetimes of anyone currently living.
 
For anyone who has been in these buildings, how is that they are considered separate buildings? They seem contiguous on ground-level (the white/black demarcation on the aerial is eye-opening). Were they built at different times?
I don't know whether they are structurally distinct, but if nothing else, you should not be able to access one from the other. The Lindemann is a secure facility as it was designed to include inpatient mental health care services. I'm not sure that any inpatient care continues at this time, but originally it was a significant aspect of how that building was used.
 
That's good news. I love the look of that part of the complex.

For anyone who has been in these buildings, how is that they are considered separate buildings? They seem contiguous on ground-level (the white/black demarcation on the aerial is eye-opening). Were they built at different times?

I certainly hope the money raised will go to reviving the Lindemann in some way. Abstract curves like the following have been one of my favorite parts of looking at the building but I have always felt less invited to stroll around in recent years with the chain-link.

I am probably not the best person to answer this, but I think they are actually separate structures with walls that abut one another. There are separate main entrances (the Lindemann's current main entrance was never intended to be such - the intended main entrance is a conference room), separate facilities, and no way (that I know of, anyway) to travel between the two indoors. They may share the parking garage, but I'm not sure about that. If you really look at the two from the street, you can see some significant differences in the facades. But the continuity of the concrete adds to the monolithic appearance.

Thankfully, there have been some minor improvements and most of the chain link fence around the building is gone. But all of the public space is underutilized, especially the intended plaza at the Staniford/Merrimac intersection which is used for parking (though the original concrete benches remain).

I think it was State Police Headquarters. This looked more bleakly imposing than the actual HQ, on Route 9 in Framingham (which is just bleak).

Yup. And more recently, The Possession of Hannah Grace which looks understandably awful. Many of the hospital/morgue scenes were filmed inside the building (and other Brutalist structures) and the ambulance loading dock is in the parking garage of the Lindemann. Some of the Lindemann is visible in the trailer as are other locations. Discerning eyes can see what matches up and what doesn't.
 
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I have always loved the "Future Shock" / "Logan's Run" look to the building, but that's because stuff like them was touted in Architectural Record in my youth, not because I ever went near them.

The problem with the whole building is that the vertical beton brut "pillar-vanes" (15 feet deep?) make it impossible to "window shop" the ground floor--they're like giant arms (three-foot thick, 30 foot high, covered with spikes) pushing you 15 feet away. And they're set about every 30 feet across the entire streetfront.

Unlike I.M. Pei's Christian Science colonade, there's no sheltering element, and no getting behind them or through them or near them (you'll only snag your sweater).

Usually I'd say keep a building that was so perfectly of its time, but this one is too perfectly hostile.

Keep Lindeman (and lose the scattered carhenges, and get it some color, plants and plaza).

Enjoy the Christian Science complex as beton brut that works.

Dynamite the Hurley and let's build something civil and humane.
 
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I don't know how I feel about this, and I'll have to become more familiar with the building as most of the time I am drawn away by the chain link fences and general coldness of the area to see if it could be improved with some enhancements, but that^ is just a blatant strawman argument. Different contexts, different massings, different executions, etc.
 
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So pretty. So beautiful. Every new building should look like this!


What building is this? Is this the building from the movie Scanners? I have been trying to figure out what that is forever.
 

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